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Sunday, November 17, 2013

Philip Pullman (Maya from The Book Nook's Bookshelf Requirements)

Hurrah! I'm very happy today to be able to share this lovely guest post from Maya from The Book Nook! Find out more about Maya here....

About me

I'm a teen book blogger and mostly review YA,
although my tastes range far and wide and include adult literary
fiction, as well as the odd children's book. When I'm not reading, I
enjoy writing, eating chocolate and climbing trees.

I am quite sure that Philip Pullman's novels were
a major factor in the development of the love for reading I have today. I
first read the His Dark Materials trilogy when I was about ten and it
quite literally opened up whole new worlds for me, in a way I hadn't
experienced before. They were my first taste of what a truly masterful
writer can create and I fell completely in love with it. My enchantment
with the series has not diminished with time - instead it has grown with
each reread (of which there have been several). They remain my go-to
books if I ever run out of reading material - although that doesn't
really happen much since I began book blogging.

Strangely, I've never reviewed any of Pullman's
books. Maybe that's because I know that any attempt would only result in
a long, rambling list of all the reasons I loved them so much! Instead,
I recommend them to people at any opportunity. As someone who has her
head in a book a great deal of the time, I do get a few people picking
up on the fact that I know a bit about books and asking for
recommendations. I don't even hesitate before answering, "the His Dark
Materials trilogy by Philip Pullman." Every time, without fail, that has
been my answer. I've given them as birthday presents a couple of times,
and the reason I'm so convinced that people will enjoy them is because
I've never met anyone who hasn't. Oh, I'm sure there must be a few out
there, but nobody I know of.

This brings me on to the film, a different situation
entirely. In 2007, a movie version of Northern Lights, the first in the
His Dark Materials trilogy, came out under the title of The Golden
Compass. It is, without a doubt, the worst book-to-movie adaptation I
have ever seen. Ever. My issues with it abound, but I will not go into
detail here as I'd just end up ranting. However, I will say that if
you've seen the film and thought, "pah, I'm not reading any book THAT
was based on!", please do try to forget as much about it as you can and
just pick up Northern Lights.

Of course, these books - wonderful as they are - aren't
the only ones Philip Pullman has written. His Sally Lockhart quartet is a
series of mysteries featuring a wide range of characters and set mostly
in Victorian London. They are fantastic and gripping, and although I
don't love them quite as much as the His Dark Materials trilogy, I have
still read them multiple times. The only other book I've read of his was
The Butterfly Tattoo, which I found in a charity shop a year ago and
picked up the moment I saw who it was by. I was actually quite
disappointed by it and found that it definitely wasn't up to the
standards of his other books, but then he did write it quite early on in
his career. Still, I wouldn't recommend it - his other books are so
much better.

Do you love Philip Pullman's books? Would you agree that these two series should be on your bookshelves? Let Maya and I know in comments!

2 comments:

I'm glad to hear the book is much better than the movie (in the case of Northern Lights). That's not too surprising! I wasn't the biggest fan of the film, but I'm definitely still curious about this trilogy. I will need to give all three books a try one day. Thanks for sharing! :)

Me Me Me

I've been running my book blog, Fluttering Butterflies, for the past (nearly) 9 years and have recently taken up booktubing on my own channel, cloveryness, as well as collaboratively with the Bookish Brits.